After a rideshare accident, most people focus on one thing: how much their case is worth.
But there is another factor that can significantly impact what you actually take home:
Your health insurance company.
If your insurer paid for your medical treatment, they may have the right to get reimbursed from your settlement. This is called subrogation.
And if it is not handled correctly, it can reduce your recovery more than expected.
A rideshare accident lawyer will factor this in from the start, not at the end.
What Is Subrogation?
Subrogation is the legal right of your health insurance company to recover the money it paid for your care after an accident.
In simple terms:
They pay your medical bills upfront
You recover compensation from the at-fault party
They seek repayment from your settlement
This applies whether your case involves:
A rideshare driver
Another motorist
Or multiple liable parties
Subrogation is not optional. It is built into most insurance policies.
Why It Matters in Rideshare Accident Cases
Rideshare claims often involve significant medical treatment.
Emergency care, imaging, follow-up visits, and rehabilitation costs add up quickly. Those bills are usually paid first by your health insurance.
When your case settles, your insurer may assert a lien against your recovery.
That means part of your settlement is already spoken for.
Without proper handling, you could end up with far less than you expected.
Not All Subrogation Claims Are Equal
The type of health insurance you have makes a major difference.
Different rules apply depending on whether your coverage is:
Private insurance
Employer-sponsored (ERISA) plans
Government programs
Some plans have stronger reimbursement rights than others.
A rideshare accident lawyer will identify what type of plan is involved and what rules apply before negotiating your settlement.
Can Subrogation Amounts Be Reduced?
Yes — but not automatically.
Many people assume they must repay the full amount. That is not always true.
In many cases, subrogation claims can be negotiated down based on:
Attorney’s fees and litigation costs
The overall value of the settlement
Disputed liability
Policy-specific limitations
This process is often called lien reduction.
Handled properly, it can make a substantial difference in your net recovery.
The “Made Whole” Doctrine
In some situations, you are not required to fully reimburse your insurer unless you have been “made whole.”
That means:
Your total recovery fully covers your damages
If your settlement does not fully compensate you, your insurer’s right to reimbursement may be limited.
However, many insurance plans include language that overrides this rule.
This is why reviewing the policy terms is critical.
Rideshare Insurance Adds Another Layer
Rideshare cases are not standard claims.
Coverage depends on whether the driver was:
Logged into the app
Waiting for a ride request
Transporting a passenger
Companies like Uber and Lyft carry large insurance policies, but accessing them requires proper legal positioning.
At the same time, your health insurer is tracking what they paid.
This creates a situation where:
Multiple insurance policies are involved
Multiple claims are being evaluated
Multiple parties are seeking recovery from the same pool of funds
Managing that balance is key to maximizing what you keep.
Timing Matters More Than You Think
Subrogation is not something to deal with after settlement.
If you wait too long:
The lien may go unchallenged
The full amount may be deducted without negotiation
You lose leverage to reduce the claim
The strategy should begin early, alongside your injury claim.
Why Insurance Companies Do Not Make This Easy
Your health insurer is not on your side in this process.
They are looking to recover as much as possible.
At the same time, the rideshare insurance company is trying to minimize what they pay.
Without a coordinated approach, you are negotiating from both sides at once.
A rideshare accident lawyer manages both fronts strategically.
What This Means for Your Final Settlement
The number you hear in a settlement is not the number you take home.
Your actual recovery depends on:
Medical expenses
Insurance reimbursement obligations
Attorney fees
Case costs
Subrogation directly affects that final number.
Handled correctly, it can be reduced. Ignored, it can quietly erode your compensation.
Speak With a Rideshare Accident Lawyer Today
Rideshare accident cases are not just about proving fault. They are about protecting your recovery from every angle, including insurance claims against your settlement.
At Bojat Law Group, we negotiate aggressively on both sides — pursuing full compensation while reducing liens that cut into your recovery.
If you were injured in a rideshare accident, call (818) 877-4878 for a free consultation.
You pay nothing unless we win.














